Horin's face was a picture of indignation. "You dare to talk to your Guildmaster in this manner?" he spat. "By the Names, just who do you think you are?"
Grimm looked directly into the Dominie's angry eyes. "I am the mage you selected as your personal weapon, and I'm more than willing to carry out that role; but I can't do this alone. Without the aid of additional personnel, I believe this is a waste of time."
"Perhaps you're right, Afelnor," Horin snarled. "It appears that I may have misjudged your loyalty, zeal, gratitude and sense of duty."
The young mage sighed, frustrated; this was getting nowhere, and it might end up with Arnor House or even High Lodge gaining a new scullery servant. Antagonising the Master of the Guild was an ill-advised course of action to pursue. Grimm forced his burgeoning emotions into the back of his mind with the practised self-control of a Questor.
"Please forgive my outburst, Lord Horin," he said, spreading his palms before him in a gesture of supplication. "I had no right to speak to you in that odious manner. Nonetheless, I do find your conditions impossibly restricting, and I can't pretend otherwise. I recognise the threat to our Brotherhood, and I'm keen to eradicate it, if I can; however, I don't relish the prospect of going on an uncertain journey, to meet an implacable and powerful enemy of unknown resources in her own den. Remember, if I am defeated, Lizaveta may well gain the weapon she needs to achieve her ends, whatever they may be."
The Dominie seemed almost to suffer some kind of fit; with his face a delicate shade of scarlet and his eyes bulging, the older man bounced and quivered as if possessed.
"You are the most contumacious youth I have ever met! Do you think so little of your powers that one frail old woman can defeat you?"
"She nearly defeated you, Lord Dominie, right here in your own demesne." Grimm's soft response made a palpable impact on the Guildmaster; Horin's infuriated spasms ceased, and the Questor noticed that the older man's face lost some of its former choler.
"I may have to face a hundred powerful witches, Lord Dominie," he said, his voice level but tinged with defiance, "each of whom has orders to try to dominate me or destroy me.
"No, Lord Horin, I'm afraid I'm not confident enough to face that test; I'd rather die, or spend the rest of my days as a menial, than lose my mind to some Geomantic puppeteer. If that's my only choice, then so be it; I'll take the scullery over that, every time."
Horin reached for a metal flask of tea at his side, and poured himself a generous measure. "Are you sure you won't have some, Questor Grimm? It's a very good blend."
Grimm shook his head, his stern expression unchanged. Horin swallowed the steaming herbal infusion at a gulp, as if he had not noticed the brew's scalding temperature.
The Dominie put down his empty cup and saucer and looked the Questor straight in the eyes. "I didn't choose to raise you to the Seventh Rank with such unseemly haste only to demote you to the rank of servant, young Afelnor, and I suspect you know it."
Grimm shrugged. "I'm in your hands, Dominie."
The Guildmaster stood up and walked around the room, his expression distant and preoccupied. He rested a hand on a small, exquisite marble statue of a Thulian Troubadour in mid-performance, and muttered, "Shamfar Gurest's finest work, seven hundred years old. It's quite priceless."
The hand lovingly stroked the sculpture's silk-smooth curves and his eyes seemed to drink in the statue's rich detail; the musician appeared almost alive, his head thrown back, his eyes closed in the bliss of music, his hands caressing a stone lute.
This is Horin's form of displacement activity, Grimm thought. He's not a man to make snap decisions he might regret later.
Looking up from Shamfar's masterwork, his hands still resting on the cool marble, the Dominie said, "Very well, Questor Grimm, I'm prepared to consider any reasonable suggestions you may have. This is a matter of vital importance, and I don't want to rule out anything that might increase the likelihood of success."
"I want to take my friend, Questor Dalquist, with me," the Questor said. "I would trust him with my life, and his word is his bond."
"No," Horin replied. "I agree that a pair of Questors might be useful, but you will take Questor Guy with you. He already knows what took place last night. And you may take Necromancer Numal with you, for the same reason; I don't want wagging tongues around here if I can avoid it. I'll brook no argument on this score; neither Questor Dalquist nor any other member of the Guild is to be informed of any details of the Quest."
Grimm shut his eyes, and suppressed a groan; As a young Questor who had risen to the Seventh Rank without Horin's influence, Guy must be a powerful mage, yet he was capricious and unreliable. Numal, on the other hand, was a rank tyro, a ditherer who seemed quite unsuitable as a companion in a dangerous undertaking. Nonetheless, the Dominie seemed implacable in his resolve to inform as few Guild members as possible.
"If there are to be three mages on the expedition, one of whom is a tyro, I want at least three warriors along with us," Grimm countered. "I have three in mind: their names are Tordun, Crest, and Harvel. All have Quested with me before, and I trust them. They are all more than competent warriors, and they remain cool under pressure. In addition to these men, I request permission to take at least the leader of the Crarian army, General Quelgrum. He may be able to suggest cunning stratagems and tactics that we can employ, so as to avoid unwanted speculation as to our purpose."
Grimm also wanted to take along his fearsome demon Seneschal, Shakkar, but he had to acknowledge that the towering titan would attract far too much attention.
"This is beginning to sound like another bloody army," Horin growled. "I don't doubt Questor Guy will have his own views on the matter, and he probably has Secular allies of his own that he will want to bring along. How do you suggest we keep such a large party secret?"
"We could take a covered wagon, Lord Horin. One man drives while the rest remain in the back of the vehicle. If we wish to stay in a town, the cart is driven through it until a resting place is found, and the others are put down in inconspicuous locations along the way, so they can make their way there as individuals, rather than as a suspicious group. If the wagon is searched, for any reason, we say that we are on a pilgrimage, or that we have picked up indigent travellers during our journey.
"We may also need to coerce a few Outsiders and take them into our confidence, in order to gain necessary information. However, if necessary, either Questor Guy or I should be able to persuade them to forget. Should any searchers or inquisitors seem unduly suspicious of us, we can do the same thing."
Grimm saw that Horin's eyes were once more distant, wandering, and he guessed the Guildmaster was mentally disassembling his proposal down to its component parts, mulling over each one.
At last, the Dominie nodded. "Very well, Dragonblaster. I have my misgivings, but I accept your counsel. We'll proceed along those lines."
Grimm knew Horin had only used the cognomen in order to increase the Questor's enthusiasm for the Quest, but the title still sounded fine to his ears, pleasing him.
"What tale do you propose I tell Prelate Thorn?" the older mage said. "I am, after all, depriving him of two valuable mages."
Grimm doubted the term 'valuable mage' could be applied to Numal, but he thought it better not to mention the fact. "I'm sorry, Lord Dominie, but I'm no politician or diplomat, and I don't think I ever will be. I owe Lord Thorn a lot, and I don't care to lie to him."
"Are you saying. enjoy subterfuge?" Horin fumed, a trace of his earlier hot temper returning. However, he soon made a placatory gesture with his hands and softened his tone. "I'm sorry, young Afelnor; you're quite right to have such reservations, and I mustn't berate you for the fact. May I assume you have accepted my proposal?"
Grimm nodded. "I thank you for your faith in my abilities, Lord Horin, from the bottom of my heart. Yes, I accept the Quest. However, I ask that you give me absolute authority over the conduct of the mission."
Horin repeated his earlier, humourless laugh. "I ca
n't do that, Questor Grimm. Although you are my chosen weapon, Questor Guy must be ten years older than you, and an experienced mage to boot. He must be considered the senior mage."
"Then, why did you ask me first?" Grimm snapped. It appeared to him that the Dominie revelled in building him up, just so he could knock him back down again. "I refuse to serve under Questor Guy. Tell him to carry out the Quest under his own terms, and see just how far he gets!"
Horin bounced on the balls of his feet, his eyes blazing. "You are just impossible, you impudent young whelp! No doubt, you'll be telling me how to run the Presidium, next!"
He could just have threatened to wipe my memory, Grimm thought, but he needs me.
The old man screwed up his face as if he had just eaten a sour pickle. "All right; I'll consider giving you joint leadership; will that be satisfactory to you, Lord Mage?"
Grimm suppressed a smile. "No, Lord Dominie. You chose me for this mission, and the inclusion of Questor Guy was only an afterthought. At first, you were happy to let me act on my own."
Horin's face appeared to boil, his complexion almost matching the deep red of his sumptuous leather armchair.
The young mage continued, his tone level and implacable: "Joint jurisdiction would just lead to inefficient disputes. There needs to be a clear leader to make the final decision."
The old man appeared to be suffused with frustrated rage. He picked up another small marble piece, as if he might be about to throw it through one of the closed windows, before apparently thinking better of it. With the statue still in his hand, he said, "What you ask-what you demand-is a clear breach of protocol. Questor Guy is the senior mage; command of the mission should be his. What reason do you, a relatively inexperienced Questor, have, to justify your being given authority over him?"
This is no time to back down, Grimm.
"Lord Dominie, Questor Guy is the grandson of Prioress Lizaveta, or so he tells me. He hates her with a passion for allowing him to spend his days as a Student in penury, and I worry that he will concentrate more on destroying the Prioress herself than eliminating her influence. I fear that he will be moved to take too many risks if left unchecked."
The old man set the statue back down with care, and the astonishment on his face was plain to see.
As for a breach of protocol, Lord Horin, I believe it is considered normal practice to inform the members of the Presidium and the Questor's House Prelate of the scope and reasons for a Quest, thought the young mage, although he did not wish to provoke Horin too much by saying so.
"I am a Guild man, Dominie," he said aloud, "and I reaffirm my Oath in all its solemnity; however, I wish to maximise its chances of success. I fear that Questor Guy has too much personal interest in a specific aspect of the undertaking, and I therefore request that you declare me as senior mage for this uncertain, and possibly hazardous, expedition. If not, I prefer to engage in the Quest without the presence of the Great Flame.
"Am I your chosen weapon or not, Lord Horin?"
His eyes, those dark, impenetrable, implacable Questor eyes, bored into Horin's. The force of a Questor's will was renowned throughout the Guild, and the Dominie, powerful as he might be, was a mere Weatherworker.
"You request this, do you, Afelnor? Well, that makes a change!" Horin said, still fuming; however, he looked away after perhaps five seconds. Only another Questor could hope to meet such a gaze for more than a few heartbeats.
"You are adamant in this… request?"
"I am, Lord Horin." Grimm lowered his eyes at last, judging that further continuation of his gaze might constitute a threat.
"You have considered that you may make an enemy of Questor Guy over this? He would expect to have control of the Quest."
"I have, Lord Horin. However, despite the Great Flame's faults, I do not believe he is a man to bear a grudge for long. We have had our arguments before and resolved them. I think we can surmount this particular obstacle, long before we encounter our quarry."
The Dominie blew his nose, leaving a ruddy clot in his brown-stained handkerchief. "In that case, you leave me little option," he said. "Very well; I'll declare you senior mage for the duration of the Quest only. On your return, successful or not, Guy will revert to the seniority due to him."
"What about me, Lord Horin? You said you would help me to clear my family name."
Horin growled, "I'm beginning to regret saying that, Afelnor, but I'll keep my word. You get this Quest, and I'll do what I can to rehabilitate your lineage."
Grimm nodded. "That's more than fair, Dominie; I thank you."
"Do you have any other stipulations, Dragonblaster? I'd rather get them out of the way now, if you don't mind."
"I will need time to prepare, Lord Dominie. I wish to be at the peak of my power when we encounter the Order. For example, on my previous Quests, I believe I suffered from insufficient preparation; I don't want to make that mistake again."
Horin nodded. "That is only prudent. How long will you need?"
"A week?" Grimm hazarded. "A month? In all truth, Dominie, I don't know. I want to cast a few more spells on my staff and try to lay my hands on a few useful protective periapts: an amulet to ward off missiles, for example; and various types of wards for specific threats. I have little idea where to look for such items, although I know they exist."
"I can help you there," Horin said, "High Lodge has a large store of such charms. Give me a list of what you think you require, and I'll try to obtain the items for you under the guise of personal research.
"These charms are only loaned, mind you." Horin wagged his index finger and frowned. "You are not to consider them as gifts. On this, I refuse to negotiate."
Grimm stood, and bowed. "I understand. Thank you, Lord Horin. I also ask that I be allowed to make my preparations from my stronghold in Crar."
"As long as you keep your purpose from as many people as possible, including your… your paramour.
"I mean it, Questor; keep your mouth closed. Is that understood?"
"Understood, Dominie; it may be difficult to come up with some kind of rationale, but I'll think of something."
Horin lowered himself into the seat opposite the Questor. "This may be the most important Quest you are ever asked to undertake, Questor Grimm. Make it a good one. No record will ever be made of what you do, but it is a vital Quest, nonetheless. Is that all?"
Grimm considered the Dominie's words; it seemed like he might be risking his life, his sanity, for little reward. "With regard to our bargain, Lord Horin: if I should find incontrovertible evidence of my grandfather's innocence, will you consider restoring his name to the Guild roll of honours? That would mean more to me than any other reward."
Horin closed his eyes and meditated for a few moments before he spoke. "I'll do what I can within the strictures of Guild Law; I am constrained by it as much as anyone else. That's all I can promise at this time, but I swear I will explore every possible avenue, including any that may arise due to future changes in the Laws. Is that acceptable?"
Grimm nodded; his heart was full. A tear rolled down the side of his nose, but he paid it no heed. "That's all I ask, Lord Mage. Thank you, with all my heart."
Horin settled back in his armchair; he appeared well satisfied. "You'll have the seventh ring on your staff by noon, and I'll have your cognomen ratified and approved by this evening. Congratulations, Grimm Dragonblaster.
"Now, can I interest you in some of this pickled herring? It's delicious."
Grimm smiled. "Thank you, Lord Horin. Perhaps I am a little hungry, after all."
The young mage felt happy beyond measure. With the possible restitution of Loras' honour in sight, he would give his utmost to the Quest, and he put all concern for his own safety behind him.
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Chapter 20: Homecoming
Grimm drew the wagon to a halt in front of the gates of Crar. From his vantage point, high above the entrance passage, a guard called out, "Who goes there? What is you
r business in Crar?"
Grimm swept the cowl from his head and shouted, "I am Baron Grimm, lord of this city." The title still sounded fanciful and ludicrous to his ears.
"One moment, please, Lord Baron."
A few minutes passed, during which, Grimm had no doubt, a number of weapons were being trained on the vehicle. At the end of this period, a small door in the great gate opened, and the Questor recognised the green-clad form of General Quelgrum.
"General, it's good to see you," Grimm called. "How goes it?"
As he drew closer, the General's lined, leathery face broke into a broad grin. He stopped several yards from the cart. "Well met, Lord Baron! I must apologise for the delay in your entrance; however, there are a few formalities to complete. With your permission, may I search your wagon?"
Grimm frowned. "This is me, General; Grimm Afelnor. You do remember me, I presume? I'm hungry and tired, and I have two Guild colleagues with me, in a similar state." He felt little inclination to play army games.
"Your pardon, Lord Grimm. There is sickness in the city of Hagarn; a grave illness, Baron. Doctor Querl is inspecting all incomers for signs of the ailment. I trust you understand."
"Hagarn? I never heard of it, General."
"It's seventy-five miles to the south-east of here, Lord Baron. That may sound a long way off, but it's better to be careful."
Grimm suppressed a smile, despite the torpor that possessed him after the long, hot journey.
Quelgrum's taking his oath to protect the city from all assaults very seriously.
"Very well, General: we'll wait for the Doctor."
"Don't you teach the hired help more respect than that?" Guy hissed from the back of the wagon. "I'm so hungry, I could eat one of these bloody horses, or maybe two. Just tell soldier-boy to step aside and let us in."
"Shut up, Guy." Grimm knew the sullen Questor responded better to defiance than diplomacy. "The man's just doing his job. You'd be more than ready to berate him if he skimped his duties and you got sick."
He could not hear Guy's sotto voce reply, but the tone of his voice, if far from cheerful, carried a note of grudging, grumbling acceptance.
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